Thank you very much.
I would go back to my earlier comments. We've been talking a lot about grasslands, and prairie grasslands in particular, and for the longest time there has been a range of species on the grassland landscape that shared that habitat with humans.
In recent years, particularly in the last couple of decades, we've seen a significant loss in a large number of species, in birds, mammals, reptiles and so on and so forth. Also for the longest time we've had human production, humans working on that landscape, particularly the ranching community. It's interesting how those evolved together over the last hundred years. In the ranching areas in southern Alberta, Saskatchewan, and Manitoba, in particular, we still find quite a lot of biodiversity, with many of the threatened species holding on because on the productive landscape, ranching tends to mimic some of the conditions that were on that landscape many hundreds of years ago before the introduction of cattle and so on.
I go back to the devolution of the Prairie Farm Rehabilitation Administration lands, which we as an organization see as both an opportunity and a challenge. The opportunity is that there is production happening on the landscape that favours many of these threatened species, but with the loss of that and the potential sell-off of those lands to private interests, we lose a real opportunity, I think, to show that on the Canadian landscape, particularly the grasslands, there is an opportunity where humans and wildlife can co-exist. Many of the threatened species that we worry about, particularly the SARA-listed ones, are going to struggle if we don't find ways of combining human and wildlife needs on that landscape.